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Bushs campaign on Iraq: more lies in defense of war
By the Editorial Board
24 August 2005
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The campaign launched by the Bush administration this week
to boost public support for the war in Iraq is both reactionary
and desperate. Reactionary, because it entails an escalation of
the lies spewed forth to conceal the predatory aims of American
imperialism in its conquest of Iraq. Desperate, because the White
House imagines that official propaganda can offset the impact
of the daily bloodshed in Iraq on American public opinion.
Bush devoted his Saturday radio address to Iraq, followed by
an appearance Monday before the convention of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars (VFW) in Salt Lake City, Utah and a speech Wednesday
to a National Guard assembly in Idaho.
The big lie of 9/11
In both his Saturday radio address and his speech Monday to
the VFW, Bush reiterated the principal theme of his war
on terror. The United States was engaged in the first
war of the 21st century, he said, one which began with the
attacks of September 11, 2001 and will continue until total
victory over the terrorists.
For nearly four years the White House has used the terrorist
attacks on the World Trade Center and Pentagon as an all-purpose
justification for military aggression abroad and attacks on democratic
rights at home, but the big lie of 9/11 has become
more and more threadbare. Bush has long since dropped the claims,
voiced incessantly before the invasion of Iraq, that Saddam Hussein
was in league with Al Qaeda, and that he might supply terrorists
with weapons of mass destruction to use against American targets.
No WMD have ever been found in Iraq, nor was there ever any
evidence of significant collaboration between the Iraqi leader,
a secular nationalist, and the Islamic fundamentalists, bitter
enemies for decades in the politics of the Middle East. Bush made
no reference to either issue in his speeches this week.
Instead, he told the VFW, this is a different kind of
war. Our enemies are not organized into battalions, or commanded
by governments. This ignores the inconvenient reality that
in both Afghanistan and Iraq it was precisely battalions and governments
that were the target of the US invasions. The American military
overthrew the Taliban regime of Mullah Omar and the Baathist dictatorship
of Saddam Hussein, destroying their organized military forces
and occupying their countries.
In neither country was the war actually directed against terrorists.
In the case of Afghanistan, Osama bin Laden and the bulk of his
followers escaped into neighboring Pakistan. In the case of Iraq,
there were no terrorists active until after the US invasion and
occupation triggered an insurgent movement among sections of the
Iraqi population.
In both cases, terrorism was only the pretext for carrying
out a program of conquest and occupation of territories of major
strategic value: Iraq, possessor of the second largest oil reserves
in the world, occupying a central position in the Middle East;
and Afghanistan, whose invasion brought American military forces
in strength into Central Asia, a rising source of oil and gas.
Neo-conservative ideologues of the Republican right advocated
the projection of US military power into Central Asia and the
Middle East long before 9/11. They argued that the United States
should seize the opportunity for successful military aggression
opened up by the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Democracy in Iraq
After Iraqi WMD proved to be non-existent, the Bush administration
shifted its justification for the invasion to its alleged mission
to establish democracy in Iraq. In his speech to the VFW, Bush
portrayed all resistance to the US occupation of Iraq as opposition
to democracy. Terrorists like bin Laden and his ally, Zarqawi,
he said, are trying to turn Iraq into what Afghanistan was
under the Taliban, a place where women are beaten, religious and
ethnic minorities are executed, and terrorists have sanctuary
to plot attacks against free people.
These words actually describe what American occupation has
created in Iraq. Only it is the Iraqi puppet of the US occupiers,
the transitional government in Baghdad, which is attacking women
and religious and ethnic minorities.
According to a lengthy account published August 21 in the Washington
Post, Shiite and Kurdish militias, often operating as
part of Iraqi government security forces, have carried out a wave
of abductions, assassinations and other acts of intimidation,
consolidating their control over territory across northern and
southern Iraq and deepening the countrys divide along ethnic
and sectarian lines, according to political leaders, families
of the victims, human rights activists and Iraqi officials...
In Basra in the south, dominated by the Shiites, and Mosul in
the north, ruled by the Kurds, as well as cities and villages
around them, many residents have said they are powerless before
the growing sway of the militias, which instill a climate of fear
that many see as redolent of the era of former president Saddam
Hussein.
The Post report described dozens of assassinations
in Basra, Iraqs Shiite-ruled second-largest city, many of
them carried out by men wearing police uniforms, and a network
of secret prisons in northern Iraq where the two ruling Kurdish
parties incarcerate hundreds of Sunni Arabs, Turkmens and
other minorities abducted and secretly transferred from Mosul,
Iraqs third-largest city.
As for the status of women, the draft constitution tentatively
agreed to by the Shiite and Kurdish party leadersand hailed
by the Bush administrationrepresents a drastic regression,
subordinating women to the rule of the Islamic fundamentalist
clergy, who will decide family and property disputes in religious
courts based upon sharia, Islamic religious law severely
unfavorable to women.
According to the Post, a fervent editorial supporter
of the Iraq war, The draft constitution submitted Monday
stipulates that Iraq is an Islamic state and that no law can contradict
the principles of Islam, negotiators confirmed. Opponents have
charged that the latter provision would subject Iraqis to rule
by religious edicts of individual clerics or sects. The opponents
also said women would lose gains they made during Husseins
rule, when they were guaranteed equal rights under civil law in
matters including marriage, divorce and inheritance.
The New York Times noted that US pressure was instrumental
in insuring that religious rather than secular law would govern
family relations: The tentative agreements on Islam were
brokered by the American ambassador, Zalmay Khalilzad, according
to a Kurdish negotiator who spoke on the condition of anonymity,
citing the delicacy of the talks. The Kurdish leader said that
in both cases, Mr. Khalilzad had sided with Shiite leaders in
backing a more expansive role for Islam. That, the Kurd said,
angered many of the secular-minded Iraqis who have been fighting
for a stricter separation between Islam and the state.
A government in crisis
The immediate cause of this hastily scheduled round of appearances
was the presence of Cindy Sheehan outside Bushs ranch in
Crawford, Texas. Sheehan became an antiwar campaigner after her
son Casey was killed on patrol in Baghdad last year. More than
1,000 people have flocked to Crawford to join Camp Casey, demanding
Bush meet with Sheehan. As many as 60,000 people participated
in evening vigils on August 17, in response to an appeal to support
Sheehans demand for immediate withdrawal of American troops
from Iraq.
While Republican Party spokesmen and right-wing media outlets
like Fox News smear Sheehan and deride Camp Casey as a publicity
stunt, Sheehans efforts have won a powerful response among
the wider public because they are rooted in the brutal reality
of a war which has taken tens of thousands of lives, both Iraqi
and American.
The US death toll in Iraq was 1,864 when Bush addressed the
VFW, (2,087 when deaths in Afghanistan are added). More than 15,000
have been wounded, many of them horribly, and countless thousands
have been damaged psychologically, like the Marine of the
Year who lost control and fired a shotgun at partygoers
last week in Lawrence, Massachusetts.
Nearly all of these US victims of the war are young men and
women killed or maimed in the prime of their lives. Each of them
is connected to dozens if not hundreds of family members, friends,
and co-workers all over the United States. To this must be added
the families and friends of the nearly 200,000 troops in and around
the two war zones, held as hostages to be used as cannon fodder
in the Bush administrations criminal war. The result is
a collective trauma that already affects millions, mainly in the
more impoverished sections of the working class where military
service has been a traditional route to college education or technical
skills.
Sheehan has touched a chord in public consciousness with her
bitter attacks on Bush as a war criminal who should be held responsible
for causing the death of her son. She voices what millions feel:
anger at the arrogant lying of the Bush administration and at
Bushs own personal indifference to the fate of the soldiers
whom he ordered into Iraq. This is a president who has never attended
the funeral of a soldier killed in his wars, and who mentioned
the number of soldiers killed in Iraq for the first time in his
speech Monday to the VFW, more than two years after the war began.
While Sheehan has become the focal point, antiwar sentiment
is growing rapidly, even according to the opinion polls commissioned
by the largely pro-war US media. Public support for Bushs
conduct of the war in Iraq was down to 34 percent in one recent
poll, and by a nearly two-to-one margin those polled said they
now opposed Bushs decision to invade Iraq. The polarization
over Iraq has reached an unprecedented level, with 80 percent
of self-identified Republicans supporting the war, but only 12
percent of Democrats. (Among those with no party affiliation,
only 36 percent supported the war.)
There is no reason to believe, however, that the Bush administration
will be pressured by the growth of antiwar sentiment to pull back
from its policy of military aggression. On the contrary, a government
which took the country into war on the basis of out-and-out lies
will have no compunction about using the most brutal and anti-democratic
methods to continue on its chosen courseincluding the preparation
of new wars, such as an attack on Iran, using that countrys
nuclear energy program as a pretext.
Bushs war policy is sustained, not by popular support,
but by the consensus of opinion in US ruling circles, including
virtually all the leading figures in the Democratic Party, that
winning the war in Iraq is a vital necessity for American imperialism.
Having embarked on a course of military aggression aimed at seizing
control of crucial energy resources, there is to be no turning
back.
In both his radio speech and his address to the VFW, Bush made
repeated references to World War II, comparing his war on
terror to the struggle against Nazism. If comparisons are
to be made to Nazi Germany, however, it is Bush who is aping the
methods of Hitler, at least in foreign policy. Not since the Third
Reich has a great power so brazenly trampled on international
law, defied world public opinion, and sought to achieve its goals
through the ruthless exercise of military force.
The eruption of American militarism has the most ominous implications,
not only for the people of the countries targeted for US conquest,
but for the working people of the United States as well. It was
significant that Bush chose to devote much of his VFW speech,
not to Iraq, but to demands for more repressive powers for the
government at home, including renewal of the notorious USA Patriot
Act. Rather than bringing democracy to the Middle East, the danger
is that this program of military aggression will mean the end
of democracy in the United States.
The World Socialist Web Site and the Socialist Equality
Party call on all American working people to unite in a broad,
grassroots campaign against the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan,
to demand the immediate withdrawal of all American and other foreign
troops, the payment of reparations to those countries, and the
prosecution and punishment as war criminals of all those responsible
for planning and executing the program of military aggression.
This struggle cannot be waged through protest and pressure
on the political establishment, or appeals to any section of the
Democratic Party. It requires the building of a new, independent
mass socialist party of the working people. And it must combine
the struggle against war and militarism with the defense of the
social and economic interests of working people at home: jobs,
living standards, social services and democratic rights.
See Also:
The media and Cindy Sheehan
[18 August 2005]
Growing support for Cindy Sheehan protest
against Iraq war
[16 August 2005]
Protest at Bushs ranch gathers
momentummother of fallen soldier continues to demand meeting
with president
[13 August 2005]
Mother of fallen soldier camps outside
Bush ranch: Why did you kill my son?
[11 August 2005]
US deaths in Iraq underscore need to revive
the antiwar movement
[5 August 2005]
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